Images: Iko Freese Arnalta (Thomas Michael Allen), Amor (Peter Renz) |
(sung in German, as Die Krönung der Poppea)
Poppea – Alma Sadé
Nerone – Dominic KöningerOttavia – Karolina Gumos
Otho – Maria Fiselier
Seneca – Jens Larsen
Arnalta – Thomas Michael Allen
Nurse – Tom Erik Lie
Valletto – Tansel Akzeybek
Druislla – Julia Giebel
Damigella, Fortune – Talya Lieberman
Amor – Peter Renz
Virtue – Katarzyna Włodarczyk
Liberto – Adrian Stooper
Barrie Kosky (director)
Felix Seiler (revival director)Katrin Lea Tag (designs)
Katharina Tasch (costumes)
Ulrich Lenz (dramaturgy)
Alexander Koppelmann (lighting)
Orchestra of the Komische Oper, Berlin
Matthew Toogood (conductor)
The drowning of Seneca (Jens Larsen) |
Monteverdi in German, with an orchestra
containing saxophones, vibraphone, and castanets, and a continuo group
including various electric (and acoustic) guitars and theorbo, directed by
Barrie Kosky: definitely not one for Sackbuts R Us and whatever its splinter
groups might be calling themselves at the moment. Farewell, then, to those
whose smelling salts did the trick a little too well, or who are too busy
clutching their pearls to read further. You will, alas, miss the bit when I say
that my problem – not to be overstated – with Elena Kats-Chernin’s realisation
(or whatever we wish to call it) of L’incoronazione
di Poppea was that it did not go further, or perhaps rather that it
sometimes went far enough, but not quite in the right (or the better)
direction.
Nerone (Domink Köninger) and Poppea (Alma Sadé) |
This is a revised version, premiered this
year, of the version given in 2012 of all three Monteverdi operas (in a single
day!), at the beginning of Kosky’s tenure here as Intendant. It seems that
there was some dissatisfaction with what came of this part of the trilogy,
Kosky, in a typically revealing programme interview, speaking of Poppea having sounded as though it were
not quite finished, Orfeo (Orpheus) and Ulisse (Odysseus) having
received very much their own soundworlds whereas Poppea had sounded ‘a little pale and vague’. That certainly did
not seem to be the case here. There were, though, times – especially earlier
on, so maybe it was a case of my ears becoming accustomed – when I felt there
was a certain prettifying gilding of the lily, or a ‘busyness’ almost for its
own sake, not least with unwanted (to my ears) complication of extra passing
notes, suspensions, and so forth: not unlike, perhaps ironically, what one often
hears in certain, allegedly ‘period’, interventionist continuo playing. On the
whole, though, and despite those passages that sounded somewhat oddly as if
they had an air of the Christmas medley to them. There was an especially
attractive – and attractively played – oboe obbligato at some point. (I am
afraid I cannot remember quite where.) What I missed was the real sense of a truly
modernist reinterpretation. Henze’s Il
ritorno d’Ulisse in patria remains an exemplar in that respect, to my ears
(and
to Thomas Allen’s) more redolent of the Mediterranean than any other. This
was perhaps more jazzy Respighi – which may or may not be to everyone’s taste,
but such will always be the case with recreation of a Monteverdi opera. A great
‘what might have been’ was the Poppea
Berio was said to have been at work on when he died; perhaps, however, even
that may be better off in the imagination of our minds.
Amor |
For reference, the orchestral
forces were two oboes, two saxophones (alto, and one covering alto, tenor, and
baritone), two trumpets (second also on flugelhorn), cimbasso, percussion
(vibraphone, maracas, castanets, glockenspiel, cymbals, bass drum, and ‘others’),
nine violas, four cellos, two double bass; the continuo group was made up of
two guitars (electric, and acoustic, also playing banjo, mandolin, dobro,
12-string steel guitar, ukulele, jazz guitar, Hawaii guitar, slide guitar),
cello, synthesiser, and theorbo). There was much in the way of atmosphere,
perhaps more when it came to the continuo instruments (arguably closer to a ‘modern’
interpretation of the Monteverdian ensemble). Conductor Matthew Toogood is
credited with the ‘concept and arrangement of continuo parts’ – so presumably
part, at least, of the credit for that should go to home. He generally paced
the action well, and with variety, although there were a few occasions –
usually no more than a bar or two – in which the tension sagged: more, it
seemed, a matter of rhythms needing tightening up than anything grievous in the
longer term.
Kosky speaks of the music’s temperature
of a sweltering summer, even when (yes, even in this realisation!) we are down
to just a couple of instruments. Katrin Lea Tag’s set designs thus suggests,
rather than pedantically represents, a volcanic landscape: ‘hot stone boulders
in a dry and desolate expanse’. The characters bring, as it were, the juice,
the refreshment, but it is a decidedly acidic variety, just as it should be.
One has to take the general Kosky æsthetic, but it seems pretty well suited in
any case. Explicit eroticism and the high camp of nurses in drag are, after
all, very much part of the work and of seventeenth-century Venetian opera more
generally. Raymond Leppard spoke of a certain degeneration at some point later
on in the works of Cavalli et al., in
which the cross-dressing and so on became ends in themselves. That is certainly
not the case here, either in work or production.
Valletto (Tansel Akzeyebek) and Nurse (Tom Erik Lie) |
And so, we had a Poppea in Alma
Sadé who was much more than mere ‘sex kitten’, although there was no doubting
the far from overstated eroticism of her performance. She was determined,
resourceful, adaptable, and beauty lay as much in her voice as elsewhere. The
dangerous Nerone of baritone Dominik Köninger, utterly in thrall to his senses,
his seemingly unlimited power, was perhaps more overtly sexual. In the chilling
scene just after the interval, in which he and Poppea gouged out the eyes of a
sexual plaything, he took the lead, although she did not demur. Much more,
however, was suggested, and it was perhaps noteworthy that we never saw either
of them naked. Nor did we see Karolina Gumos’s dignified, yet unswervingly cold,
Ottavia. Jens Larsen’s Seneca, on the other hand, met his end sad, lonely,
denuded in every sense: exposed as a fraud, or at least severely questioned,
not only by Nerone, but also by Tansel Akzeybek’s vain, thrusting Valletto.
Maria Fiselier’s Otho proved duly sympathetic, utterly lost to his/her
passions, although not unambiguous in that respect. Tom Erik Lie and Thomas
Michael Allen were properly outrageous, again not unsympathetic, if just as
scheming as everyone else, as the pair of old nurses. Peter Renz, uncannily
reminiscent of Betty White, strode the stage, effortlessly, starrily – like an
evil Fairy Godmother –stirring up mischief, heartache, and death, as Amor.
As ever at the Komische Oper,
there was an excellent sense of company; all contributed to a drama
considerably greater than the sum of its parts. The immediacy of the vernacular
German – even to me, an Englishman – in Susanne Felicitas Wolf’s translation for
the most part justified itself; I missed Busenello’s Italian far less than I
could ever have imagined. It was, moreover, little less than a masterstroke to
have Ottavia’s final ‘Addio’ in the original: not just in itself, but since it
was followed by the ‘continuo’ echo of three gunshots by the deranged Emperor: Ottavia,
Drusilla, and Otho were no more. Quite a musical coup de théâtre!
‘One cannot emphasise the
incredible radicalism of this opera enough,’ Kosky rightly says. ‘It is,’ he
continues, ‘a through and through sarcastic piece about political intrigue and the
cold, calculating instrumentalisation of emotions in the intrigues of power. In
this piece, there is essentially not a single truly positive figure. All are
deeply ensnared by general moral corruption.’ That is perhaps not telling us
anything we do not know, but the point is that that is very much what Kosky
shows us on stage, at least as clearly as in that admirable summary. That seems
to me an ‘authenticity’ worth lauding. And yes, the radicalism remains as
incredible as ever, at least as extreme as in the operas of Berg, and yet nearly
three centuries earlier. It is not, I hasten to add, that we should be
surprised at radicalism from ages other than our own: such is the arrogance and
stupidity of those with no sense of history. It is, perhaps, worth noting,
though, that it speaks to us as directly as ever – with or without, I think, the
accoutrements of ‘historicism’ or ‘modernity’. The glory here remains that of
Monteverdi, of Busenello, and of the performers who continue to bring their
genius to performative life.